When a Select doesn't turn on anymore what might likely be the cause?: On/Off toggle swithch, Capacitor, etc.. Yes it is plugged in and no fuses are blown. I have been using a sovtek 5y3 rectifier for several months now. The amp is 3 years old.

If none of the tubes light up after you turn it on, then the fuse is in fact blown, or you put a blown one back in, or you put the fuse in the wrong spot. At least I'd be willing to bet my Christmas fruitcake on it ;)

Thanks Steve for rapid reply and on Xmas eve of all times. If you or anyone can tell me where the fuse is located inside a Select that would be helpful. I looked inside with my Cree flashlight but can not see anything that looks like a fuse. NOT AN EMERGENCY SO ENJOY YOUR XMAS EVE. I popped in a T-amp in the meantime but as good as it is it doesn't compete with the select. Just is not as magical (accurate?) as a Select. Ritchie Blackmore's guitar sounds like Ritchie Blackmore's guitar on the Select.

Holiday listening has resumed. Thanks to your help. When it is Xmas day and practically everything is closed that spare fuse is a nice touch. Steve initially replied to my first post so I imagine he might check out this thread again. Maybe his wheels are already turning regarding a Select with an integrated DAC

I read recently that Steve Jobs the guy who gave us the iPod owns a turntable and has a vinyl collection. I play vinyl exclusively through my Select. However the other week I connected a laptop to the Select and played some complete songs off of Pierre Sprey's Mapleshade site. He has some song samples that are entire songs. It was fun to do, sounded pretty damn good, and it got me thinking as I'm sure it has him thinking too. He already has vibration control supports for laptops and such. I googled Wadia iTransport and wow what an interesting product. Apparently Steve Jobs considers his iPod a high-end source so he gave Wadia permission to bypass the DAC or D/A or whatever inside of the iPod. Anyway I find it encouraging because I would get an iPod if the sound quality started to improve which I think it will.

No, that's not the point. The Wadia is the only machine that is offered that takes a digital signal from an iPod and is designed to be a transport for that signal. There IS NO DAC within. You can feed the analog signal out from the iTransport, but that's what you get, a nice sounding analog out through quality components, but it does not decode the digital signal. Has a coaxial out.